Trailing Touch


Autoria(s): Mafe-Keane, Vanessa
Data(s)

04/11/2014

Resumo

Trailing Touch (2014) is a twenty minute classically-based dance work set to music by composers Carter Burwell and Hildur Gudnadottir. It is an abstract work that explores images based on imperfect patterns and seeks to transmit the sensations felt when clusters form and disperse through the space or crisscross to create swirling wave-like reactions in the dancers’ tulle skirts. These simple references are inspired by the lyrical use of arms found in ballet, particular to the ballet aesthetic. Trailing Touch was created in collaboration with QUT’s third-year BFA (Dance Performance) students and performed as part of Dance14 at QUT’s Gardens Points Theatre from the 4th to 8th November 2014 and was performed in Singapore as part of Contact Contemporary Dance Festival on 30th November, 2014. Additionally, the creative process of Trailing Touch (2014) forms the initial project of Phase III of my PhD research, Writing the Dance Score in the Twenty-first Century: An approach for the Independent Choreographer. This PhD research will examine the potential of dance scores as a suite of choreographic strategies to map key aspects of the choreographic process. While a certain degree of ambiguity drives the creative process, the suite of choreographic strategies attempt to capture what is transmitted through the lived experience of dance. “[T]hese documents harbor a force of expression, a visual energy related to the body and the movement” (Louppe 1994, 7) that triggers movement responses, unforeseen intensities and enables personal interpretation. Consequently, Phase III will test and evaluate the relevance of Phase II research within the pressures of mainstream dance rehearsal and performance contexts. In Project One Trailing Touch this was demonstrated in the dance scores produced by the choreographer and interpreted by the dancers within the performance. By drawing from both the theoretical and practical, it is anticipated that this research will suggest a form of languaging movement that is not reliant on images or numbers, but generated in response to the intuitive and complex process underpinning choreographic practice. Rather than constructing a codified dance notation system, it will focus on strategies that reveal movement, its spatial patterns, qualities and intensities of expression and the procedures underlying key choreographic concepts. The outcome of this research project aims to support the independent choreographer in two major areas, by facilitating and enriching the choreographic process for both the performers and choreographer, and by strengthening artistic development and performance outcomes.

Formato

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Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81763/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81763/25/81763a.pdf

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81763/26/81763b.jpg

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81763/3/Trailing%20Touch%202014_0001%20Singapore.jpg

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81763/4/Trailing%20Touch%202014_0002%20Singapore.jpg

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81763/5/Trailing%20Touch%202014_0003%20QUT.jpg

http://www.gardenstheatre.qut.edu.au/whatson/2014/dance14.jsp

Mafe-Keane, Vanessa (2014) Trailing Touch. [Live Performance (Dance)]

Direitos

Copyright 2014 [Please consult the author]

Fonte

Dance; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #190403 Dance #Independent choreographic practice #Choreographic process #Choreography
Tipo

Creative Work